The Terre Haute City Court and clerk will demonstrate for the public the new Odyssey case management system at 2:30 p.m. Nov.
21 in Terre Haute City Court, City Hall, 17 Harding Ave. Indiana Supreme Court Justice Frank Sullivan, Jr. will join local
court officials to answer questions about the system and show the public how it works.

Jan Aikman Dickson, the wife of Indiana Justice Brent E. Dickson, will be inducted into the Warren E. Burger Society Friday.
Membership in this society honors those who have shown a commitment to improving the administration of justice through service
or support to the National Center for State Courts.

The Indiana Supreme Court suspended a Logansport attorney for one year because he routinely allowed his secretary to prepare
and sign his name on bankruptcy petitions and other court documents, including one petition that she mistakenly filed in the
wrong District.

The Indiana Supreme Court will visit Indiana University South Bend and Notre Dame Law School Monday to hear arguments in two
cases, including one in which a teen was sentenced to life without parole for murdering his brother.

The Indiana Supreme Court has denied a rehearing petition from the state attorney general’s office to revisit a June
ruling that upheld three statutes involving juvenile judges’ authority on out-of-state placements.

A legislative study committee is about a week away from finalizing its proposals to clarify state law and allow for Indiana
residents to use reasonable force to resist police entry into their homes in all but domestic violence and certain emergency
situations.

A legislative subcommittee meeting Thursday will consider preliminary drafts of legislation to clarify Indiana law in the
wake of the Indiana Supreme Court’s decision upholding that residents have no common law right to resist police entering
a person’s home.

The Indiana Supreme Court’s state office of Court Appointed Special Advocates honored Ronda Moyers of Howard County
as Volunteer of the Year at the 15th annual GAL/CASA conference. She was nominated by a child who she advocated for while
the child was in foster care.

The Indiana Supreme Court revised the Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure to allow pro se litigants and other potential clients
to use limited scope representation more often and without some of the restraint they’ve had in the past.

Scolding the Indiana Department of Child Services for how it handled a parental termination case, the Indiana Supreme Court
has found an incarcerated mother’s due process rights were not violated when she did not receive adequate notice about
pending proceedings that would affect her rights as a parent or when she was not allowed to attend the hearings.

The Indiana Supreme Court will consider a certified question from federal court concerning disability pension funds for police
and firefighters who are already eligible and receiving benefits governed by Indiana statute.